Week 2: Curation Tools and Strategies [July 16, 2012, 7:39 a.m.]
Digital tools present us with both the need and the ability to curate the texts and information we encounter and create in virtual spaces. What tools do we employ? How do we evaluate them?
- What curation tools would you recommend? (There is a place below to collaboratively build a list. Just click Edit at the top of this page to add to it.)
- How do these tools support my efforts to curate resources for my work? For my students?
- What practical curation strategies have people used to manage the abundance of information available on the web?
- How do the strategies we employ inform our selection of tools? How do the tools we choose inform the strategies we employ?
Curation Tools (include a link, a brief description, and why you like it.)
- Storyify - allows you to bring in tagged content from Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Flickr, web sites, etc. to build embeddable stories; Good because it lets you hand choose (curate) what you include, unlike some other services which work only on tags
- Diigo- a social bookmarking tool that allows collaborative annotation. I like Diigo because it allows me to tag, highlight, annotate and collaborate. I think it is good representation of how texts and tools are evolving. (I guess I buy the claim made by this image.)
- Pocket-love this because it's quick and easy to use with Twitter (and with web pages on my computer) and stores everything in one easy to access place (from all my devices). I like how it looks when I go back to it. Maybe I won't love it as much when I get better at tagging and organizing, but right now it is my favoite curating tool!
- Paper.li -- It's sort of like a cousin to Storify, I think. I use it for collecting/publishing shared materials off my NWP Twitter list. But I admit. I have no agency with the tool other than providing it my Twitter List. It uses some algorithm to create the daily news. I can tinker with the headline news, but I rarely do. (see the NWP Daily News for example of Paper.li.) I also know there is advertising, but I turn it off with AdBlock.
- It's the flavor-of-the-month but Pinterest is certainly one of the ways that lots of people are now collecting, sharing (curating?) information in a visual way. What I find interesting is whether folks use the text box to put the sharing in perspective. I've been trying my head sporadically with Pinterest. (See my "board" about comics and teaching.)
- Scoop.It--it is free up to five 'topics'. You can use it to curate everything from Tech Pedagogy to Curation. Once you have signed up and set up the keywords you want the program to look for you are ready to curate. And it is set up to allow you to comment on the sites you drag into your topic, but it also allows you to share with social sites (FB, Twitter, LinkdIn) and it makes it dead easy to autopost to your WordPress blog. If you happen across something outside their curation ecology, you can use a bookmarklet to scoop.it into your topic. Handy as a pocket on a shirt.